Not only is this new wall painted by Peruvian muralist, Jade interesting, so is the architecture of the building behind it. How cool are those windows? This new image of a person laying on their stomach with the their hand behind their back, was painted in the Chorrillos district of Lima, Peru.

Stan Lex and crew spent nearly a month inside a church that was built in 1590 located in Mentana, Rome. Their time in this ancient structure was consumed in creating a large image of an anonymous woman, made from a painstaking two-layer stencil. The wall painted was not part of the original building; a portion of it was destroyed in an earthquake. There is a time-lapse video documenting the process.

Humorous and proactive imagery painted in the streets of Spain by Escif. A person is halfway in a large dumpster with their legs sticking out. Reminds us of an installation Mark Jenkins created that made it appear like a human was casually laying in a dumpster. Continuously creative work from this Spanish muralist.

Dutch artist Elisabet Stienstra has created the Virgins of Apeldoorn, a series of three bronze statues of girls that appear to be floating over a park. When seen together, the bronze sculptures almost appear to be a sequential series of a girl turning over in her sleep. Not only is their the awkward moment for the passer-by to see underneath the girl's clothing, which to us seems intentional no matter how you slice it, the works really do appear to float. Stunning stuff.